Brady Tkachuk Just Made Panthers-Senators Rivalry A Whole Lot More Personal

A shocking trade sends Ottawa Senators captain Brady Tkachuk to Florida, leaving teammates and fans alike grappling with the unexpected shift.

Shane Pinto didn’t need long to explain how Ottawa felt when Brady Tkachuk was dealt to Florida. The Senators center said the move landed as a genuine shock, and for good reason: Tkachuk had been the face of the franchise and a fixture in the room for all six of Pinto’s NHL seasons.

On Monday, Pinto spoke on TSN1200 in Ottawa and revisited the Father’s Day blockbuster that sent Ottawa’s former captain to the Panthers in exchange for three first-round picks and a second-round pick. Nearly a month later, the dust has mostly settled around the league, with the NHL Draft and the start of free agency already in the books, but Pinto made it clear the trade still carried weight.

“It took everyone by surprise,” Pinto said during the interview. “He’s been such a big part of this organization, obviously the face of it, and he’s obviously one of my good buds too, so to see him go, it sucks.

I think he just wanted to go down a different path, and I totally understand that. We have a bunch of guys here that have been here for a while, I think we’re all growing together.

We just wish him all the best and I know we’ll see him down the road. He’s going to be in our division, so I’m sure we’re going to see him a lot.”

Tkachuk’s next stop makes the whole thing even more unavoidable. Florida was the ideal landing spot because it lets him continue his career outside Ottawa while joining his brother Matthew in South Florida, and the brothers have already had plenty to say about becoming NHL teammates on their Wingmen podcast. Brady was also formally introduced in Florida a few days after the trade.

Pinto didn’t lean into the drama of it all. Instead, he framed the situation the way players usually do: as a business move with a personal layer underneath it.

“At the end of the day, you just want guys who want to try to win for the Ottawa Senators, and that’s that,” Pinto said. “You want everyone on the same page and everyone going for the same goal, and that’s all you want.

On a personal level, he’s still going to by my bud. There’s always going to be a business side of hockey, so you just leave that out of it.”

The Senators and Panthers will meet four times this season, as division rivals do, and that only adds to the spotlight already waiting for Tkachuk. With the attention around the Tkachuk brothers and the history of heated Ottawa-Florida matchups in recent years, the first season of Brady in a Panthers sweater should have no shortage of edge.

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